ACMI, Art and Creative Materials Institutehttp://www.acminet.org/index.htm
P.O. Box 479, Hanson, MA 02341-0479
Telephone: 781-293-4100; Fax: 781-294-0808E-mail: debbief@acminet.org
The Art and Creative Materials Institute, Inc. (ACMI) is an international association, composed of a diverse and involved membership, and is recognized as the leading authority on art and craft materials. Founded in 1936, ACMI was organized to assist its members in providing the public with non-toxic art and craft materials for children and artists. The institute's members are art and craft material manufacturers, and currently there are more than 210 members. Of the 60,000 art and craft material formulations evaluated to date, 100% of the children's products and 85% of those meant for the adult artists are certified as non-toxic. All products in the program undergo extensive toxicological evaluation and testing before they are granted the right to bear the ACMI certification seals.

Association of Occupational and Environmental Clinics (AOEC)http://www.aoec.org/
1010 Vermont Ave., NW #513, Washington, DC 20005
Telephone: 888-347-2632E-mail: AOEC@AOEC.orgSince its founding in 1987, the Association of Occupational and Environmental Clinics (AOEC) has grown to a network of more than 60 clinics and more than 250 individuals committed to improving the practice of occupational and environmental medicine through information sharing and collaborative research. They offer a link to occupational and environmental state clinics. AOEC goals include to aid in identifying, reporting, and preventing occupational and environmental health hazards and their effects; to encourage the provision of high-quality clinical services for people with work or environmentally related health problems; to provide a means for occupational/environmental health clinics to share information that will better enable them to diagnose and treat occupational/environmental diseases; to increase communication among clinics concerning issues related to patient care; to facilitate liaison between clinics and agencies responsible for workplace/environmental monitoring; and to provide a source of data for research projects related to occupational/environmental health.
http://www.aoec.org/index.htm

Health and the Arts Programhttp://www.uic.edu/sph/glakes/harts/
835 South Wolcott Street, Room #E144, Chicago, IL 60612-7341
Telephone: 312-996-7420; Fax: 312-413-7369E-mail: dhryhorc@uic.edu
The mission of the Health in the Arts Program is to diagnose, treat, and prevent arts-related disorders among people working in all aspects of the arts. There is increasing recognition that work in the arts can involve health risks such as exposures to toxic materials and hazardous physical conditions. Injuries and repetitive motion disorders can also result from practice and from work in the arts.

Medical specialists in this program treat arts workers with health concerns that may be caused by their work or affect their ability to work. These specialists also work with the arts communities to investigate and prevent hazardous work practices among art students, hobbyists, and professionals. The focus of these efforts includes the following:
Diagnosis and treatment of arts-related disorders
Education on hazards in the arts
Workplace safety and hazard control
Research on causes and prevention

Regional Contacts

Illinois Greening Schools http://www.greeningschools.org
Illinois Greening Schools, One Hazelwood Drive, Champaign, IL 61820
E-mail: ilgs@istc.illinois.edu
The Greening Schools project supports schools by assisting with improving physical environmental conditions, while also providing teachers with standards-based tools to introduce the concepts of waste reduction and pollution prevention. One component of this project involves chemical management. School administrators and teachers have access to chemical management workshops and on-line resources, and workshop participants can take advantage of waste chemical removals. Workshops are designed for chemistry teachers as well as all visual, industrial, and performing arts teachers

Improving Kids' Environment http://www.ikecoalition.org/
6530 Cricklewood Road, Indianapolis, IN 46220
Telephone: 317-902-3610, Fax: 866-234-8505E-mail: mccabe@ikecoalition.org
Improving Kids' Environment is a non-profit, advocacy coalition that facilitates tangible and significant improvements to children's health through reduction in environmental threats to children. IKE will help children reach their full potential by working with citizens, non-profit organizations, governments, businesses, and others to identify enviornmental health threats.

Wisconsin Green and Healthy Schools Programhttp://www.dnr.state.wi.us/org/caer/ce/greenschools/
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, PO Box 7921, Madison, WI 53707
Telephone: 608-264-8976E-mail: christal.winter@dnr.state.wi.us
Wisconsin Green and Healthy Schools program is a Web-based, voluntary program available to all public and private elementary, middle, and high schools across Wisconsin. The program encourages teachers, staff, students and parents to work together to use the school, its grounds, and the whole community as learning tools to help teach, promote, and apply healthy, safe, and environmentally sound practices.

The Western Sustainability and Pollution Prevention Network (WSPPN) is a cooperative alliance of pollution prevention (P2) programs throughout EPA Region 9 (Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada, Trust Territories, and Tribal Lands). The network serves as a technical resource for regional P2 issues through researching, consolidating, and disseminating P2 information. WSPPN was established in 1997 and is run as a service provided by The Business Environmental Program (BEP) at the University of Nevada, Reno.